If you're up late Sunday night, or early Monday morning, the webcast below should begin about 15 minutes before the anticipated launch time. This satellite will provide video, data, and other communications services across the Asia-Pacific region and the Middle East. The booster then came back to Earth for a pinpoint landing shortly after that liftoff, but won't do this for the SES-12 mission. So far, only the first stages have been landed and launched again.

The rocket lifted off at 12:45 a.m. and is the second flight for the launcher's first stage, Space.com reports.

SpaceX has since upgraded its Falcon 9 rocket, so it did not attempt a recovery effort of the booster this time. The first stage is part of the Falcon 9 "Block 4" build, which is an older variant that SpaceX is phasing out.